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Grilled flank steak in a simple teriyaki sauce is loaded with flavor after marinating overnight. No cooking until it hits the grill!
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This recipe is the best for seafood lovers. Clams are steamed with sake and mirin and a bit of green onion in this Japanese-style preparation.
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A yogurt dill sauce is a cool, creamy counterpart to salmon poached in a delicate white wine and shallot broth.
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Lemon, lime, apples, and grapes are added to white wine and brandy to create this refreshing twist on sangria.
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Tomato, cucumber, and onion in a simple red wine vinegar and olive oil dressing is a quick and easy salad.
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Steamed mussels with a white wine and Greek yogurt sauce. Garnish with plenty of lemon and serve with a good crusty bread.
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Escargot served with a creamy garlic sauce in a phyllo dough shell. Helix snails can be found at specialty and gourmet grocery stores.
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This seafood treat is best prepared over a charcoal fire, but in bad weather the oven broiler will do. The secret is in the marinade.
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This absolutely delicious pork tenderloin is prepared simply by first browning in a skillet, and then finishing in the oven. Served with a Marsala cream sauce, prepared while the pork is baking, the dish can be prepared in under an hour. The sauce is tasty over steamed vegetables as well.
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Get Sea Bass in Artichoke Stew, and Tequila served with Ricotta Tortita Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
If there’s such a thing as boomer cuisine, it can be found in the pages of “The Silver Palate Cookbook” by Sheila Lukins and Julee Rosso With its chirpy tone and “Moosewood”-in-the-city illustrations, the book, published in time for Mother’s Day in 1982, gave millions of home cooks who hadn’t mastered the art of French cooking the courage to try sophisticated dishes like escabeche, wild mushroom soup and that new thing called pesto This recipe, also in the book, came to The Times in a 2007 article celebrating the 25th anniversary edition